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Bolivia's Morales Eye Middle Way on Coca

Morales has asked coca growers to accept a cooperative eradication program projected to destroy 12,400 acres of coca crops this year, the minimum set by Bolivian law. While that's the smallest area since 1994, Morales' approach of holding lengthy talks with growers has largely avoided the violence of past U.S.-backed forcible eradication campaigns.

These have killed at least 88 farmers, police and soldiers since 1987, according to the Andean Information Network, a nonprofit group that monitors the drug war in Bolivia. Government officials believe the toll is several times higher.


Bolivian President Evo Morales, listens to a question during press conference in Cochabamba, Bolivia on Thursday, Dec. 7, 2006 at the second South American summit. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)
Bolivian President Evo Morales, listens to a question during press conference in Cochabamba, Bolivia on Thursday, Dec. 7, 2006 at the second South American summit. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia) (Martin Mejia - AP)

Destruction of cocaine-processing facilities has jumped 56 percent on Morales' watch, though U.S. officials believe that's in part because drug production has risen.

Morales' kinder, gentler eradication hasn't stopped Bolivia's bitterly poor subsistence farmers from chafing at the limits placed on their most profitable crop.

In September, two growers died battling soldiers who were sent to destroy coca planted along the disputed border of Carrasco National Park, a traditional coca-growing region where the plant is now banned inside park limits.

Weeks earlier, farmers in the Yungas region northeast of La Paz briefly detained a government minister _ himself a local coca grower _ sent to promote a voluntary eradication program.

On paper, Bolivian laws permit coca-growing in about 38,000 acres of designated areas, while limiting growers to one "cato," a third of an acre. But the United Nations estimated coca production to be 65,000 acres last year, and U.S. officials believe the crop has continued to expand in 2006.

Unofficially, the government has let farmers grow up to a cato throughout the country. Though Quispe's fields lie outside the designated zones, the soldiers left her with one cato of her healthiest plants, enough for her to earn only about $500 a year.

In September, the U.S. State Department demanded the repeal of the cato exception. Morales' government refused.

"Nobody will change our coca policy, no matter what happens," Felix Barra, the minister in charge of developing legal coca markets, told the AP. "The cato of coca has cost us many lives, and much blood, and we can't then just submit ourselves to the will of another government."

Bolivian officials won't say whether eradication will continue at the same pace next year, or at all. Morales has said he would like the cato limit to be formalized in law, while others have suggested raising the legal production limit _ both sure to raise a howl in Washington.

But Morales already hears the grumbling at home. Farmers blocked highways in October demanding the right to plant two or even three catos apiece, and even Barra has admitted planting more than a cato in his hometown in the Yungas.

Back on Quispe's newly barren terraces, she and her neighbors wondered whether other Bolivians would also be willing to give up their livelihood to support Morales' young government. Modesta Arce, an elderly farmer, sat glumly among piles of plants starting to wilt in the sun.

"We've sacrificed," she said. "But will everyone else sacrifice, too?"


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© 2006 The Associated Press